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Every Halloween Movie, Ranked

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  • ️Fri Oct 19 2018

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Halloween H20 20 Years Later (1998) and Halloween (2018)
Custom Image by Ana Nieves

While there may be one entry in the franchise that stands out as the best Halloween movie, how the series ranks is much debated by fans. The Halloween series turned 45 in 2023, an impressive feat considering creator John Carpenter never wanted a sequel. The original Halloween wasn’t the first slasher movie, but it set a blueprint that would come to define the genre. With a slew of low-budget, increasingly gory slasher movies followed, including Friday the 13th and A Nightmare on Elm Street, many of the archetypes in these movies could be traced back to 1978's Halloween.

Carpenter reluctantly penned a direct sequel to Halloween, attempting to kill off Michael Myers. The director then attempted to turn the series into an anthology with 1982’s Halloween III: Season of the Witch, but the audience’s rejection of a Myers-free entry quickly put an end to that idea. Michael was brought back for Halloween IV: The Return of Michael Myers, but the series has branched off into unpredictable and unfortunately odd avenues ever since. David Gordon Green’s 2018 Halloween hit the franchise reset button again on a new yet divisive trilogy, leaving the future of the franchise unknown.

13 Halloween: Resurrection (2002)

Directed By Rick Rosenthal

halloween resurrection poster

Your Rating

Halloween: Resurrection

Release Date

July 1, 2002

Runtime

94minutes

Director

Rick Rosenthal

Halloween: Resurrection was released in 2002 and is the eighth film in the Halloween franchise. Directed by Rick Rosenthal, the film is a direct sequel to Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later and sees the return of the murderous Michael Myers to Haddonfield when his childhood home is exploited as a horror attraction. 

Even the most devoted fans of the Halloween movies are hard-pressed to find much merit in Halloween: Resurrection. The movie is, in a word, atrocious. Both the script and concept are terrible, the characters utterly uninteresting, the suspense non-existent, and the film undoes the good ending of Halloween H20. Jamie Lee Curtis is brought back for a contractually bound cameo in the opening scene to retcon H20’s ending before the film jumps ahead to what feels like a reality show that takes place in the Myers house.

Halloween: Resurrection pretends to be making some kind of commentary on the nature of reality TV and the internet age, but it’s ultimately nothing else but a cynical, creatively bankrupt cash grab. The whole enterprise can best be summed up with the visual of rapper Busta Rhymes kung-fu fighting with Michael Myers, which is unintentionally hilarious. What's more, Busta Rhymes somehow beats the superstrong Michael — twice.

12 Halloween 5: The Revenge Of Michael Myers (1989)

Directed By Dominique Othenin-Girard

Halloween 5 The Revenge of Michael Myers Movie Poster

Your Rating

Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

Release Date

October 13, 1989

Runtime

96 Minutes

Director

Dominique Othenin-Girard

Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers is the second part in the "Thorn Trilogy" sequels and sees the return of the masked serial killer to the town of Haddonfield. Despite the best efforts of Haddonfield's law enforcement and townsfolk, Michael survives their recent attempt to slay him, allowing him to continue his hunt for his niece, Jamie Lloyd. However, Jamie senses his return via an inexplicable telepathic connection, setting her up to prepare for another showdown with the town's eternal foe.

Halloween IV was a franchise rejuvenating hit, so a sequel was immediately greenlit. Sadly, Halloween 5 suffered because it was a rushed production, having been written, shot, and edited less than a year after the previous installment. This results in a bizarre sequel with lots of tonal oddities. While Jamie Lloyd is the nominal protagonist, the story jumps to different characters for long stretches, making for a strained rhythm.

The infamous Man in Black makes his introduction in a subplot that feels almost disconnected from the rest of the movie. While Michael has had to suffer some bad masks throughout the series, the one he’s afflicted with in Revenge is arguably the worst. However, the film is not all bad news. Donald Pleasence makes a great return as Loomis, the movie has some interesting stylistic flourishes, and an extended chase involving Jamie trapped in a laundry chute is one of the most intense parts of any sequel.

11 Halloween: The Curse Of Michael Myers (1995)

Directed By Joe Chappelle

Halloween The Curse of Michael Myers Movie Poster

Your Rating

Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers

Release Date

September 29, 1995

Runtime

87 Minutes

Director

Joe Chappelle

The final film in the "Thorn Trilogy" of Halloween films, Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, is a horror/slasher film by director Joe Chappelle. Set six years after Michael escaped at the end of the prior film's events, he and his niece, Jamie Lloyd, are kidnapped by a cult, with Jamie giving birth during the chaos. The two escape, with Michael continuing his murderous pursuit in this final chapter of the original '90s Halloween saga.

There was a big gap between Revenge and the cleverly subtitled Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, which was a famously troubled production. The previous entry set up several mysteries Curse had to address, namely the Man in Black and the tattoo symbol he shared with Michael in addition to luring back audiences burned by the last movie.

The Curse of Michael Myers sought to answer the question of what made The Shape evil. The answer encompassed an ancient Celtic cult and a star constellation, making the whole explanation ludicrous and roundly rejected by fans. The movie also opens with the needlessly graphic death of Jamie Lloyd, which sets an unpleasant tone for the rest of the story. Paul Rudd made his movie debut as hero Tommy Doyle while Pleasence returns for the final time as Dr. Loomis.

Blended image of Michael Myers and the Halloween credits citing him as The Shape

Related

Halloween: Why Michael Myers Is Called The Shape

The first Halloween film referred to Michael Myers as "The Shape", and there's an interesting origin to the name that fits the character quite well.

Halloween 6, which briefly had Quentin Tarantino involved, has some atmospheric imagery, a couple of effective stalking sequences, and the occasionally inventive murder. The convoluted storyline and nasty tone ultimately work against it, however, and it never once feels scary. The movie has a well-published alternate version dubbed The Producer’s Cut, but there’s not much difference in quality aside from a noticeably toned-down finale.

10 Halloween Ends (2022)

Directed By David Gordon Green

Halloween Ends Poster

Your Rating

Halloween Ends
ScreenRant logo

5/10

Release Date

October 14, 2022

Runtime

111 Minutes

Director

David Gordon Green

The showdown against Michael Myers, Laurie Strode, and the entire town of Haddonfield comes to a head in the final installment in the David Gordon Green Halloween trilogy, Halloween Ends. Set four years after the last film, Allyson is now living with Laurie and believes that the ghost of Michael Myers is no longer haunting her as he once did - deciding to live a new life with her granddaughter and carry on. But when history repeats itself when one man is accused of murder after babysitting a child, Haddonfield again descends into chaos. Now believing the killer to have struck once more, Laurie Strode will prepare herself to face off with Michael Meyers for the final time. 

Halloween Ends is the most recent installment of the Halloween franchise, marking the 13th original film in the series. Upon its release, many were initially pooling it with some of the worst installments in the entire franchise, particularly because it was an underwhelming ending to David Gordon Green's modern trilogy that started out with such high expectations from 2018's Halloween.

Criticisms reflect these sentiments of disappointment with Green's trilogy, which clearly tapered in quality and originality from Halloween to Halloween Kills. There are some redemptive qualities about Halloween Ends that suggest critics might have been too harsh on the film given its context.

Its major flaw is taking the focus away from Laurie and Michael by centering around the brand-new character Corey, which is not what fans or critics want from a trilogy finale. It was a strange narrative choice that ultimately robbed fans of what they wanted to see, more Laurie and of course more Michael. However, it did end the trilogy with the definitive stance that Michael would not be coming back.

9 Halloween II (2009)

Directed By Rob Zombie

01157215_poster_w780.jpg

Your Rating

Halloween II

Release Date

August 28, 2009

Runtime

105 minutes

Director

Rob Zombie

Cast

  • Headshot Of Malcolm McDowell

    Malcolm McDowell

    Dr. Samuel Loomis

  • Headshot Of Scout Taylor-Compton

    Scout Taylor-Compton

    Laurie Strode

Halloween II, released in 2009, follows Laurie Strode as she grapples with the aftermath of her brother Michael Myers' deadly return to Haddonfield, Illinois. As she struggles with her trauma, Michael prepares for another encounter with his sister.

Rob Zombie’s movies in the Halloween saga are probably the most divisive among the fanbase. Some will defend them as brave reinventions of the Michael Myers mythology, whereas others find them abrasive and unpleasant. The truth probably falls somewhere in between as Zombie brings a unique style and tone to the franchise.

Rob Zombie's brutal Halloween 2 is plagued with issues from unlikeable characters, an odd structure, and tonal experiments that don’t quite work.

While his ambition can’t be faulted, his overall execution is problematic. Zombie’s first Halloween was met with polarized critical and audience responses. He returned for a sequel when promised greater creative freedom despite once vowing that Halloween would be a one-off for him. This results in Zombie tearing up the Halloween rule book entirely. Michael is seen unmasked and even speaks, while Dr. Loomis (Malcolm McDowell) has turned into an amoral jerk.

The film ends on a staggeringly bleak note. Rob Zombie's brutal Halloween 2 is plagued with issues from unlikeable characters, an odd structure, and tonal experiments that don’t quite work. That said, it also has some beautiful imagery, great performances, especially from Brad Dourif’s put-upon Sheriff Brackett, and a fantastic and unpredictable opening chase in a deserted hospital. The movie is ultimately an ambitious mess but regardless of how it panned out, it remains one of the most unique Halloween outings.

8 Halloween Kills (2021)

Directed By David Gordon Green

Halloween Kills Movie Poster

Your Rating

Halloween Kills
ScreenRant logo

4/10

Release Date

October 15, 2021

Runtime

105 Minutes

Director

David Gordon Green

In the sequel to 2018's Halloween, Halloweek Kills sees the Strode family minutes after they left masked monster Michael Myers caged and burning in their basement; Laurie is rushed to the hospital with life-threatening injuries, believing she finally killed her lifelong tormentor. But his ritual bloodbath resumes when Michael manages to survive. The Strode women join a group of other survivors of Michael's first rampage, deciding to take matters into their own hands to end Haddonfield's killer once and for all.

While David Gordon Green's Halloween 2018 was greeted with mixed responses, there's little denying that it was a huge success. Halloween Kills takes a cue from 1981's Halloween 2 by picking up moments from the end of the previous movie to inspire the new beginning. While the sequel gathers together returning cast and characters and doesn't skim on gore, Halloween Kills is sadly a mess.

Even by the modest standards of the slasher genre or even 1978's original Halloween, Halloween Kills' story is almost non-existent. The movie's tone veers from goofy comedy to on-the-nose social commentary and overly harsh violence. Green and his screenwriters are seemingly making up for the lack of any real narrative drive with distractions like a larger-than-usual body count and nostalgic callbacks that feel hollow.

What's worse is that series icon Jamie Lee Curtis spends Halloween Kills largely sidelined from the action. The performances are mostly fine with newcomers Anthony Michael Hall and Robert Longstreet making the biggest impressions, but many of the actors are given thinly developed roles. Halloween Kills deserved better than this somewhat tiring outing.

7 Halloween (2007)

Directed By Rob Zombie

halloween (2007)

Your Rating

Halloween

Release Date

August 31, 2007

Runtime

97 minutes

Director

Rob Zombie

Cast

  • Headshot Of Malcolm McDowell

    Malcolm McDowell

    Dr. Samuel Loomis

  • Headshot Of Scout Taylor-Compton

    Scout Taylor-Compton

    Michael Myers

  • Headshot Of Tyler Mane In The US Premiere of Paramount Pictures
  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Daeg Faerch

    Laurie Strode

Michael Myers escapes from the mental institution where he was committed after killing part of his family. Sixteen years later, he returns to his hometown, even more ruthless and with an even more murderous instinct. His target is now a group of teenagers.

Series fans had been bitterly disappointed by Halloween: Resurrection before Rob Zombie’s remake. Since the filmmaker had recently directed the acclaimed The Devil’s Rejects, a fresh take on Michael seemed like it had potential. Zombie is very much inspired by the raw grittiness of '70s cinema like The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and his style is a total 180-degree turn from the measured pacing of Carpenter’s original.

Zombie reimagines the backstory of Michael, who was raised in an abusive house and begins hurting animals as an outlet for his rage. His impulses soon turn to murder and the film charts his gradual slip from Michael Myers into The Shape. This first half of the film is the strongest. While the performances are mostly good and the violence effectively brutal, the crass, over-the-top dialogue and “edgy” tone are jarring. Several cameos from genre luminaries feel somewhat forced too.

The second half is basically the original movie played on fast-forward, revisiting many of the key beats and iconic moments with an appearance from original Jamie Lloyd actor, Danielle Harris. Zombie feels a little disconnected during these sequences but springs back to life when coloring outside the lines. His Halloween has flashes of greatness, but this feels like he would rather have made a Texas Chainsaw reboot than a Halloween movie.

6 Halloween IV: The Return of Michael Myers (1988)

Directed By Dwight H. Little

Hallowen 4 The Return of Mcihael Myers Movie Poster

Your Rating

Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers

Release Date

October 21, 1988

Runtime

92 Minutes

Director

Dwight H. Little

Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers is the fourth installment in the Halloween film series. It takes place ten years after the events of the original movie. It follows Michael Myers as he returns to Haddonfield to hunt down his niece after escaping from a mental institution.

Halloween IV was made in the run-up to the 10th anniversary of the original. This movie, which nearly made Michael a ghost, jumps ahead a decade to reveal Laurie Strode passed away in a car crash and had a young daughter named Jamie. Just like David Gordon Green’s 2018 movie, Halloween IV: The Return of Michael Myers was an attempt to go back to basics.

The story opens with the reveal that both Michael and Dr. Loomis somehow survived the inferno at the end of Halloween 2. Upon learning he has a living niece, the comatose Michael springs back to life. While Halloween IV has sprinkles of gore, it does a nice job of building suspense and getting to know the characters first.

Michael Myers Halloween and Halloween Kills Posters

Related

Is Michael Myers Human Or Supernatural? Every Version Explained

In Halloween Kills, Michael Myers emerges alive from a fire that should have killed him. Is "The Shape" human, superhuman, or simply evil incarnate?

Some of the set pieces, like a chase through an empty school and on a rooftop, are effectively staged. Jamie makes for a sympathetic heroine and Harris really commits to the role. Halloween IV's long production delay ultimately just resulted in a Xerox of the original. Thanks to great performances and well-staged action, Halloween IV makes for an entertaining sequel. The opening credits are atmospheric and enjoyable, and the ending closes on one of the most shocking notes of the entire saga.

5 Halloween II (1981)

Directed By Rick Rosenthal

Halloween II 1981 Poster

Your Rating

Halloween II

Release Date

October 30, 1981

Runtime

92 Minutes

Director

Rick Rosenthal

Halloween II is a direct sequel to John Carpenter's original 1978 Halloween starring Jamie Lee Curtis. In the sequel, Laurie Strode is transported to Haddonfield Memorial Hospital to recover from her injuries, but Michael Myers continues to hunt her down. Halloween II is also the film that established Michael and Laurie were siblings, which would become one of the most controversial twists in the Halloween franchise.

The success of 1978's Halloween led producers to think that there was still gold to be mined from the concept so a sequel was requested. Carpenter felt there was no more story following the original, but accepted a deal to write and oversee the production. By his own admission, it was a painful script to write, and the somewhat controversial reveal that Laurie Strode is the sister of Michael Myers was an attempt to inject something unexpected.

Halloween II picks up where the original left off, with Laurie being wheeled to a hospital and Dr. Loomis (Donald Pleasence) continuing his hunt for Michael. New director Rick Rosenthal brought back much of the same crew in an attempt to make a seamless transition between the two films. While the movie isn’t nearly as sleek as its predecessor, Halloween II features some creepy sequences, another great soundtrack, and a committed turn by Pleasence.

Unfortunately, Curtis spends most of her screen time confined to a bed but the final half-hour is an effective cat-and-mouse chase between her and Michael through the eerily quiet hospital. The sibling twist is effectively handled, although providing Michael with a motive does undermine his aura somewhat.

4 Halloween III: Season Of The Witch (1982)

Directed By Tommy Lee Wallace

Halloween 3 Season of the Witch Poster

Your Rating

Halloween III: Season of the Witch
ScreenRant logo

8/10

Release Date

October 22, 1982

Runtime

98 minutes

Director

Tommy Lee Wallace

Halloween 3: Season of the Witch is a sci-fi horror film that acts as the third film in the original Halloween films that started in the 1970s. The first and only Halloween film not to feature Michael Myers as the villain, Halloween 3 instead focuses on witchcraft. When a man escapes with a strange jack-o-lantern mask while on the run from mysterious men in suits, the truth is that these masks kill children when they put them on. Protagonists Daniel and Ellie decide to discover the truth behind the manufacturer, the Silver Shamrock company, but what awaits them is a confrontation out of this world.

Halloween III: Season of the Witch acts as an experiment for Carpenter and Hill planning to turn Halloween into an annual anthology centered around the holiday after Halloween II ended with Michael being burned to a crisp. The film follows a doctor who uncovers a conspiracy in a small town by a local toy maker. There’s no denying Halloween III is a strange movie. The storyline doesn’t make much sense and it’s an odd mix of slasher, corporate satire, and folk horror.

The hero is a sleazy, alcoholic doctor who skips out on spending time with his children to hit on the daughter of his murdered patient. Despite this, Halloween 3 still developed a cult following for being an eerie treat, featuring several disturbing set pieces and a fantastic score by Carpenter. The film also features the maddeningly catchy Silver Shamrock theme, which becomes a literal signal of madness by the time the credits roll.

Season of the Witch was a dud financially, with fans and critics baffled by the lack of Michael Myers — hence his return in Halloween IV. Despite once being considered the black sheep of the series, it is now considered a great standalone horror tale.

3 Halloween H20: 20 Years Later (1998)

Directed By Steve Miner

halloween h20 poster

Your Rating

Halloween H20: 20 Years Later

Release Date

August 5, 1998

Runtime

85 Minutes

Director

Steve Miner

Halloween: H20 is the seventh installment in the iconic horror franchise. H20 establishes a new timeline in the Halloween franchise, picking up after Halloween II and following Laurie Strode as she hides from her brother, Michael Myers. Having faked her death and working as a teacher in California, she and her son are brought back into danger when Myers finds her and slays his way through those around her.

Jamie Lee Curtis was the instigator of Halloween H20 once she realized the 20th anniversary of Halloween was coming up. She got in touch with Carpenter and Debra Hill in hopes of reuniting on a new sequel to explore what happened to Laurie Strode after the original, but she wound up being the only returnee. H20 was developed following the smash success of Scream, so the script was infused with much of the same meta-self-awareness.

H20 picks up with Laurie having faked her death and gone into hiding, working as the headmistress at a private school while being an overprotective mother to John (Josh Hartnett). The sequel is at its best when exploring Laurie’s psyche struggling to hide her alcoholism and overcome the sneaking fear her brother will return. When he inevitably does, it leads to a great final act where she grabs an ax and decides to end her nightmare once and for all.

Needless to say, Curtis is great and bolstered by an impressive young cast that includes Michelle Williams and Joseph Gordon-Levitt. The end result of Halloween H20 makes it one of the standouts of the entire film franchise, particularly considering that the final scene would have been a perfect ending to the original series.

2 Halloween (2018)

Directed By David Gordon Green

Halloween 2018 Movie Poster

Your Rating

Halloween
ScreenRant logo

7/10

Release Date

October 18, 2018

Runtime

106 Minutes

Director

David Gordon Green

Halloween is the first film of the David Gordon Green-directed sequel trilogy to the 1978 original horror/slasher film. Having been institutionalized for forty years after the events of the original Haddonfield murders, Michael Myers escapes during a prison transfer to pursue his original target, Laurie Strode. Having lived in fear of his shadow for years, Laurie learns of his return, setting the stage for war while trying to protect her daughter and granddaughter from her masked tormentor.

Anticipation and anxiety greeted the announcement of David Gordon Green’s Halloween. But Green directing, Blumhouse producing, and Curtis and Carpenter's involvement ticked many boxes for devotees, and thankfully, Halloween 2018 largely proved an entertaining sequel and a revitalizing note for the Halloween franchise.

Green and Danny McBride’s script balances suspense, drama, and humor wonderfully, and the cast is great, especially Curtis’ haunted Laurie. Halloween 2018 and its retcons are somewhat the work of fanboys, including an extended one-take prowl through Haddonfield littered with Halloween II Easter eggs.

Blended image of Michael Myers from the Halloween franchise

Related

Every Actor Who Played Michael Myers In The Halloween Movies

Halloween's Michael Myers has appeared in many forms by many actors over the years since John Carpenter's 1978 film. Here's who plays him.

Despite this, Halloween still largely plays like its own movie. Green’s sequel is welcoming to fans and newcomers alike. The decision to drop the convoluted mythology and focus on Laurie and her family dealing with the literal monster in their closet is a welcome, back-to-basics approach. It also does the impossible by making Michael scary again, a feat that once seemed challenging in previous installments.

1 Halloween (1978)

Directed By John Carpenter

Halloween 1978 Movie Poster

Your Rating

Halloween

Release Date

October 27, 1978

Runtime

91 Minutes

Director

John Carpenter

Halloween is a horror film released in 1978 that centers on the fictional town of Haddonfield, Illinois, as a masked serial killer terrorizes it. Over a decade after the brutal murder of Judith Myers by her brother, Michael, Michael escapes from the local Sanitarium to continue his silent killing spree- with teenage Laurie Strode being his new potential victim.

Halloween started life as The Babysitter Murders, a low-budget film about a killer stalking babysitters. Carpenter was hired to write and direct, with the producer later having the idea to set it on Halloween. Looking back on the production, it appears a lot of its most acclaimed elements were happy accidents, such as how the iconic William Shatner mask that became Michael Myers’ face was bought in a store.

In addition, Jamie Lee Curtis auditioned for the lead and just happened to be the daughter of Janet Leigh, star of Hicthcock's Psycho. With a shocking opening, measured pace, haunting music, and prowling camera work, Halloween sets viewers on edge throughout.

Viewed through modern eyes, the movie can seem clichéd and predictable, but it’s important to remember that Halloween created the formula other franchises were essentially built on.

Viewed through modern eyes, the movie can seem clichéd and predictable, but it’s important to remember that Halloween created the formula other franchises were essentially built on. Halloween wasn’t an instant success, but word of mouth propelled it to become one of the highest-grossing independent movies of all time, launching Carpenter’s career, turning Jamie Lee Curtis into a horror movie scream queen, and making Michael Myers a cinematic icon.

The Future Of The Halloween Franchise

Halloween Ends, as the title suggested, gave a pretty definitive conclusion to the story of Laurie Strode and Michael Myers. It also seemed to be the agreed-upon end for a lot of people involved in that particular trilogy. David Gordon Green and Jamie Lee Curtis both commented many times that Halloween Ends marked the last Halloween movie they would be involved in. However, few people actually think there won't be any more Halloween movies to come.

Green has admitted that he expects other directors will take their own approach to the franchise and that there will likely be new iterations of Laurie and Michael. Even Curtis gave doubt to Halloween truly being done for her despite her feeling like she is ready to leave the character behind:

I have hung up my bell-bottoms and my pale blue button-down shirt, and I have relinquished [Laurie] to the ages with a warm, 'aloha,' and a thanks for all the years and memories. And yet, if I’ve learned anything in my 65 years on the planet, it’s never say never. Goodbye.

John Carpenter has also commented that a new Halloween movie seems inevitable in the future and there are always ways to bring Michael Myers back. While there hasn't been any confirmation of a new Halloween movie, the franchise is moving forward in a brand-new way with a Halloween television show announced in 2023. The details of the series are still unknown, with it unclear if Laurie and Michael will be featured. Miramax's Head of Worldwide Television, Marc Helwig, suggested it will be a return to the roots and possibly another retcon:

It’s a creative reset completely and going back to the original film, as opposed to spinning out of any of the more recent film adaptations.

While it sounds like the Halloween series will indeed be focused on Haddonfield and the iconic masked killer, it will be interesting to see if the television approach could allow for Carpenter's original vision of a horror anthology series to finally happen.